Contact

Conservation: Materials Science

This course is intended to provide students with an understanding of materials. It focuses on pre-industrial technologies, deterioration processes, and condition of objects. Students gain first-hand experience of examination methods and analytical techniques, and have access to a wide range of equipment and facilities in the Institute’s Wolfson laboratories, including optical microscopy, X-radiography, scanning electron microscopy, electron microprobe, and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy.

Aims of the course

To familiarize the student with the properties,
technology and decay mechanisms of pre-industrial materials and to
provide them with an understanding of the analytical techniques used in
identifying, characterizing and assessing their condition. To give the
student an increased awareness of the important information an object
can yield with analysis and technological study.

Objectives

On successful completion of this course a student should:

Be familiar with the technologies involved in producing
traditional artefacts and be able to interpret decayed material with a
view to understanding its original state.

Have an overview of a wide range of analytical techniques
for the study of artefacts and be able to choose the most appropriate
method of analysis for a particular situation.

Be able to carry out the following analytical procedures :
SEM, XRF, FTIR, Optical microscopy, Xradiography

Be aware of the sorts of information specialist scholars
are seeking to educe from cultural heritage material.

Learning Outcomes

On successful completion of the course students should
be able to demonstrate/have developed:

The ability to read and critically evaluate scientific
reports and papers with reference to the appropriateness of the
techniques employed and the presentation of the data included.

The application of the knowledge aquired to the broader
field of Conservation practice to ensure that conservation procedures
protect and reveal the information that an artefact carries and that
information is not destroyed or obscured.

The ability to produce and a report containing scientific
data appropriately presented and interpreted.

Teaching Methods

The course is taught over the first two terms, through
weekly lectures, demonstrations and practical classes (all are
compulsory). Where required small group sessions will be arranged to
give students greater familiarity with some of the techniques covered in
the course. Teaching will take place in the conservation laboratory,
practical sessions will be held in the conservation laboratories or in
the appropriate area of the basement labs.